How do you feel about veganism?
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If you're vegan and it's working for you, great.
My choice is not to do that because even if I decided to do without meat, I love cheese and every type of fake cheese I've tried (and I've tried a LOT because my wife is lactose intolerant) sucks. I can't skip cheese.0 -
janejellyroll wrote: »wstephens87 wrote: »For me, especially where I live, veganism is way to expensive. If you want to pay $15 for a small frozen vegan pizza, sure it's a healthy option vs. regular pizza. But there aren't many options here where I live in the vegan world and most of them are over priced. I'm a pescetarian. Meaning I am a vegetarian only I eat seafood as my only meat source (if you want to call it meat, that's debatable). Doing so I still have troubles getting enough protein but it's pretty healthy and the fish contains great omega nutrients. I feel bad about eating fish, but I feel like it's more humane than the meat industry and it's healthier than the other meats as well. I've been on this diet since I was about 11 or 12. I am now 28. I used to call it vegetarianism only I'd say but I'm not as strict. I eat seafood still. But they finally came up with a name for it. I hate that it sounds like pest. But it's because Pisces means fish...or something like that...for me Pescetarianism is the way to go. But to each their own!
But you don't have to have a small frozen vegan pizza. You can just have a regular pizza (most places have a vegan crust and sauce option), hold the cheese, add vegetables.
Vegans don't have to eat special "vegan" foods.
I spend about $25 a week for groceries unless I decide to buy something special. I buy 99% of my food at a regular grocery store. It isn't "vegan" stuff. It's just food that doesn't have animal products.
Vegans, just like non-vegans, can choose to buy fancy, expensive, pre-made foods. Or they can choose not to.
Same here! Plus, we're lucky and have a big produce store nearby, and it's way less expensive than the grocery store. I get a nice little workout carrying around several pounds of produce and usually spend around $12 for them. One thing that has really helped me a lot is learning to cook and bake stuff that I once had only purchased as pre-made items. It is definitely more time-consuming, but well worth it to me, and I've even come to enjoy it very much.0 -
babybellyfat wrote: »I have no problem with vegans, vegetarian or meat eaters! In fact all my family and friends eat me but me.
Sounds painful...
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Need2Exerc1se wrote: »wstephens87 wrote: »For me, especially where I live, veganism is way to expensive. If you want to pay $15 for a small frozen vegan pizza, sure it's a healthy option vs. regular pizza. But there aren't many options here where I live in the vegan world and most of them are over priced. I'm a pescetarian. Meaning I am a vegetarian only I eat seafood as my only meat source (if you want to call it meat, that's debatable). Doing so I still have troubles getting enough protein but it's pretty healthy and the fish contains great omega nutrients. I feel bad about eating fish, but I feel like it's more humane than the meat industry and it's healthier than the other meats as well. I've been on this diet since I was about 11 or 12. I am now 28. I used to call it vegetarianism only I'd say but I'm not as strict. I eat seafood still. But they finally came up with a name for it. I hate that it sounds like pest. But it's because Pisces means fish...or something like that...for me Pescetarianism is the way to go. But to each their own!
What makes a frozen vegan pizza healthier than any other frozen pizza?
It's healthier because they use non-milk cheese (made from almonds and such) meaning no milk. The FDA in the US needs much more strict regulations considering the amount of puss, antibiotics, and hormones they are legally allowed to leave in the milk when they release it to the masses for sales and consumption. Also the other frozen pizzas contain preservatives and processed meats which are no good. Not to scare you. I still get down to eating some frozen tostino's pizza every once in a while. But it's good to know not to put this in your body very often if you are wanting to be healthy .
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Need2Exerc1se wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »snowflake954 wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »wstephens87 wrote: »I'm a pescetarian. Meaning I am a vegetarian only I eat seafood as my only meat source (if you want to call it meat, that's debatable).
I learned something new today. So basically anything from the ocean is fair game? What about freshwater fish, clams, etc? I am not writing this to be snarky... I really want to know
Yup.
So do they eat dauphins and whales?
Isn't that a bit like asking "Do they eat beetroot?" of a vegan? It's not as if every pescatarian eats the exact same diet.
Very true. It may not be to that particular person's tastes. BUT Beetroot is still on the menu, even if they choose not to partake.0 -
tryin2die2self wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »snowflake954 wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »wstephens87 wrote: »I'm a pescetarian. Meaning I am a vegetarian only I eat seafood as my only meat source (if you want to call it meat, that's debatable).
I learned something new today. So basically anything from the ocean is fair game? What about freshwater fish, clams, etc? I am not writing this to be snarky... I really want to know
Yup.
So do they eat dauphins and whales?
Isn't that a bit like asking "Do they eat beetroot?" of a vegan? It's not as if every pescatarian eats the exact same diet.
Very true. It may not be to that particular person's tastes. BUT Beetroot is still on the menu, even if they choose not to partake.
Well you've already been told that seafood is on the menu. Are you asking about eating sea mammals?0 -
Need2Exerc1se wrote: »
Interesting perspective. In a parallel universe where the whole world becomes vegan, what happens to the animals? Having been domesticated for so long, would they survive in the wild? Would we blame ourselves for their near extinction? Would the omnivore minority be making sensationalized propaganda ridden documentaries depicting the now wild animals suffering with disease, starving and dying that start with a close-up shot of a waif young animal standing next to its dying mother?
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janejellyroll wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »snowflake954 wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »wstephens87 wrote: »I'm a pescetarian. Meaning I am a vegetarian only I eat seafood as my only meat source (if you want to call it meat, that's debatable).
I learned something new today. So basically anything from the ocean is fair game? What about freshwater fish, clams, etc? I am not writing this to be snarky... I really want to know
Yup.
So do they eat dauphins and whales?
I think it would depend on one's rationale for adopting pescetarianism.
If it is about thinking fish are somehow different from other animals (that they don't suffer as much as other animals do, for example), you would probably avoid dolphins and whales because they aren't exactly fish -- they're mammals who live in the water.
If it's about just wanting to eat things that live in the sea and not on land, sure.
That is why one of my questions was "anything in the ocean fair game". I would not think they would eat whales or dauphins (as they are mammals), but then they might. For instance I eat beef, but I don't eat veal. I don't truck with the whole idea behind caging a baby in a confined space, force feeding them milk and then slaughtering them for a certain price/taste of meat. I am an omnivore and an omnivore could technically eat anything. That said, I am a being with a moral compass and reason. So I pick and choose.
Again, I was looking to pescetarianism as a group of foods that are eaten, not the moral/ideological/cultural grounds behind it. Just want to become more informed. Not looking to judge.0 -
tryin2die2self wrote: »wstephens87 wrote: »I'm a pescetarian. Meaning I am a vegetarian only I eat seafood as my only meat source (if you want to call it meat, that's debatable).
I learned something new today. So basically anything from the ocean is fair game? What about freshwater fish, clams, etc? I am not writing this to be snarky... I really want to know
Any seafood is fair game. Fish, shrimp, etc... I have tried full on vegetarianism but always fail. I feel healthier when I eat seafood and at least they don't pump it with hormones and torture it before it's up for consumption like they do chickens and cows etc.. It's just healthy to me. But to each their own. @snowflake954 I learned something new today as well. I didn't know this was Italian! Cool! @tryin2die2self I would say that's a matter of personal morals! LOL I would say most probably frown on eating dolphins and whales. And where in the heck would they eat a whale anyway?! Whaling is legal in the US? @janejellyroll that is true in lots of big cities. But not where I live. We don't even have a produce store within 20 miles for all I know of. @chunky_pinup lol0 -
amusedmonkey wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »
Interesting perspective. In a parallel universe where the whole world becomes vegan, what happens to the animals? Having been domesticated for so long, would they survive in the wild? Would we blame ourselves for their near extinction? Would the omnivore minority be making sensationalized propaganda ridden documentaries depicting the now wild animals suffering with disease, starving and dying that start with a close-up shot of a waif young animal standing next to its dying mother?
Many of the animals commonly eaten would die without humans some would not. Pigs have been known to escape and live in the wild. But I doubt a chicken would make it through the night.0 -
tryin2die2self wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »snowflake954 wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »wstephens87 wrote: »I'm a pescetarian. Meaning I am a vegetarian only I eat seafood as my only meat source (if you want to call it meat, that's debatable).
I learned something new today. So basically anything from the ocean is fair game? What about freshwater fish, clams, etc? I am not writing this to be snarky... I really want to know
Yup.
So do they eat dauphins and whales?
I think it would depend on one's rationale for adopting pescetarianism.
If it is about thinking fish are somehow different from other animals (that they don't suffer as much as other animals do, for example), you would probably avoid dolphins and whales because they aren't exactly fish -- they're mammals who live in the water.
If it's about just wanting to eat things that live in the sea and not on land, sure.
That is why one of my questions was "anything in the ocean fair game". I would not think they would eat whales or dauphins (as they are mammals), but then they might. For instance I eat beef, but I don't eat veal. I don't truck with the whole idea behind caging a baby in a confined space, force feeding them milk and then slaughtering them for a certain price/taste of meat. I am an omnivore and an omnivore could technically eat anything. That said, I am a being with a moral compass and reason. So I pick and choose.
Again, I was looking to pescetarianism as a group of foods that are eaten, not the moral/ideological/cultural grounds behind it. Just want to become more informed. Not looking to judge.
One could eat sea mammals and still fit the definition of pescatarian.0 -
snowflake954 wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »snowflake954 wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »wstephens87 wrote: »I'm a pescetarian. Meaning I am a vegetarian only I eat seafood as my only meat source (if you want to call it meat, that's debatable).
I learned something new today. So basically anything from the ocean is fair game? What about freshwater fish, clams, etc? I am not writing this to be snarky... I really want to know
Yup.
So do they eat dauphins and whales?
That would be like saying "You eat meat, therefore you eat bear, cougar, beaver etc....". Some cultures eat whale---Japan. We eat ocean fish, fresh water fish, clams, mussels, shrimp, prawns, lobster, tuna, salmon, salt cod, the list goes on...... It's pretty much normal for us. I do alot of pasta with seafood.
I was not asking what "you" ate in particular (see my previous post). I did mean "they" as the group of pescetarian as a whole. Individuals pick and choose by their very nature. That said, I am a hunter. I have also been put in survival situations where one eats and can't be choosy about it. Also, my kin are from Arkansas. Growing up, who the heck knows what was in the stock pot To be sure I have hunted and eaten a lot of things other would consider distasteful/abhorrent.
I am not looking to point fingers or poke holes in someone's diet. I was just interested. I currently live on the Gulf Coast and to be sure just about all the ocean fish you mention we eat. Raw oysters FTW.0 -
To each their own! My friend lost 50lbs switching to a vegan diet.0
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Ooohhh...how did I know this thread would get all sanctimonious and preachy? Oh, I know...'cuz vegan.0
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Need2Exerc1se wrote: »Many of the animals commonly eaten would die without humans some would not. Pigs have been known to escape and live in the wild. But I doubt a chicken would make it through the night.
Pigs are not only known to survive in the wild... they thrive. Feral pigs are a plague upon the land.
They have no natural enemies (as we killed them all off / we released them in the US to begin with), they do untold damage to crops and water infrastructure (levies and damns). I try to bag as many as I can. As an ardent hunter, I only kill what I plan to feed my family. This animal is the exception. I will forgo a deer kill to put down a feral swine. A female pig can have three litters every two years. Each one usually has 8 to 12 shoats (piglets). Shoats can have their first litter before their first birthday. If a female only had 8 shoats and only half of them are female. Do the math on the the exponential growth of just one pair in a decade.
The answer is more wild ham and bacon!
Yard chickens would survive. I doubt many of the hen house chickens would... but some would survive.0 -
Need2Exerc1se wrote: »
One could eat sea mammals and still fit the definition of pescatarian.
Only if you didn't understand the difference between a fish and a mammal.0 -
I'm tempted. But I like dairy a lot.0
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I feel the same way about veganism as I do about any other way of eating - I don't care what other people choose to eat. I will continue to eat meat, but you feel free not to. But there does seem to be a large portion of vegans that feel it's their duty to tell others what they "should" be eating. I have a bit of a problem with those people, but not veganism itself.0
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singingflutelady wrote: »I don't care how others eat I just don't like how a small minority of people (in every way of eating) feel they are morally superior to others and try to convince everyone to convert to their views
When one choice has such a drastic impact on the environment I hardly consider it a bad thing to try to convert people into a sustainable diet.
But if you want to think inside of a vacuum where choices only affect you that's fine :^)0 -
amusedmonkey wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »
Interesting perspective. In a parallel universe where the whole world becomes vegan, what happens to the animals? Having been domesticated for so long, would they survive in the wild? Would we blame ourselves for their near extinction? Would the omnivore minority be making sensationalized propaganda ridden documentaries depicting the now wild animals suffering with disease, starving and dying that start with a close-up shot of a waif young animal standing next to its dying mother?
Yes to being a meat eater and I'm glad someone picked on my hypothetical slant. If we all become vegan and no longer consume meat or animal by products then what use are these animals to us? They would take up valuable farm land that can be used to grow grain. At best these animals become endangered, most likely extinct. The ONLY reason there are as much 'food chain' animals as there are is because of the food market.0 -
cwolfman13 wrote: »Ooohhh...how did I know this thread would get all sanctimonious and preachy? Oh, I know...'cuz vegan.
Yeah, I don't have a problem with anyone's dietary decisions (except that I feel paleo can be a little nonsensical, but I wouldn't really go out of my way to express that to a paleo eater... just casually on a forum like right now). It doesn't seem doable to me, but I'm not an eighteen-year-old girl, so maybe that's the reason. I don't see how any could get the protein I'm trying to eat in a day on rice, beans, quinoa, tofu, tempeh, etc. I do get pretty bothered when vegans start justifying it by making me feel like a jerk for my own decisions. Whatever happened to live and let die?0 -
bclarke1990 wrote: »singingflutelady wrote: »I don't care how others eat I just don't like how a small minority of people (in every way of eating) feel they are morally superior to others and try to convince everyone to convert to their views
When one choice has such a drastic impact on the environment I hardly consider it a bad thing to try to convert people into a sustainable diet.
But if you want to think inside of a vacuum where choices only affect you that's fine :^)
Sort of like this. Thanks for the judgement, judgy mcjudgerson, best friend of judges judy and reinhold.0 -
bclarke1990 wrote: »singingflutelady wrote: »I don't care how others eat I just don't like how a small minority of people (in every way of eating) feel they are morally superior to others and try to convince everyone to convert to their views
When one choice has such a drastic impact on the environment I hardly consider it a bad thing to try to convert people into a sustainable diet.
But if you want to think inside of a vacuum where choices only affect you that's fine :^)
A sustainable diet could include meat. There are many wild animals that would overpopulate their area and die of starvation if not hunted, and if you are going to hunt you might as well eat your kill. It's quite easy to raise some animals at home with little impact on environment.0 -
bclarke1990 wrote: »singingflutelady wrote: »I don't care how others eat I just don't like how a small minority of people (in every way of eating) feel they are morally superior to others and try to convince everyone to convert to their views
When one choice has such a drastic impact on the environment I hardly consider it a bad thing to try to convert people into a sustainable diet.
But if you want to think inside of a vacuum where choices only affect you that's fine :^)
...have you ever examined what impact on the environment there would be if everyone were vegan/vegetarian? You should...very interesting actually. But hey, judgey gonna judge right?
/annoyingvegans0 -
BrianHageman wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »
One could eat sea mammals and still fit the definition of pescatarian.
Only if you didn't understand the difference between a fish and a mammal.
Or don't understand the definition of the word pescatarian0 -
wstephens87 wrote: »It's healthier because they use non-milk cheese (made from almonds and such) meaning no milk. The FDA in the US needs much more strict regulations considering the amount of puss, antibiotics, and hormones they are legally allowed to leave in the milk when they release it to the masses for sales and consumption.
I hate it when my puss gets in my milk. I tell him it's not good for him and he should stick to water!
(I'm also happy with my dairy sourcing.)0 -
tryin2die2self wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »Many of the animals commonly eaten would die without humans some would not. Pigs have been known to escape and live in the wild. But I doubt a chicken would make it through the night.
Pigs are not only known to survive in the wild... they thrive. Feral pigs are a plague upon the land.
They have no natural enemies (as we killed them all off / we released them in the US to begin with), they do untold damage to crops and water infrastructure (levies and damns). I try to bag as many as I can. As an ardent hunter, I only kill what I plan to feed my family. This animal is the exception. I will forgo a deer kill to put down a feral swine. A female pig can have three litters every two years. Each one usually has 8 to 12 shoats (piglets). Shoats can have their first litter before their first birthday. If a female only had 8 shoats and only half of them are female. Do the math on the the exponential growth of just one pair in a decade.
The answer is more wild ham and bacon!
Yard chickens would survive. I doubt many of the hen house chickens would... but some would survive.
Chickens would not survive without man for long. Dogs, coyotes, wolves, foxes, raccoons, opossums, birds of prey, wild cats are just a few predators that would happily kill them without the protection of man.0 -
bclarke1990 wrote: »singingflutelady wrote: »I don't care how others eat I just don't like how a small minority of people (in every way of eating) feel they are morally superior to others and try to convince everyone to convert to their views
When one choice has such a drastic impact on the environment I hardly consider it a bad thing to try to convert people into a sustainable diet.
But if you want to think inside of a vacuum where choices only affect you that's fine :^)
While I don't get annoyed by it personally, I can understand why some would. I doubt people are oblivious to the cruelty. The more likely scenario is that some choose to fight this battle in a different way, and some choose to distance themselves from it and choose a different battle to fight.
What would you do if everyone with a cause, however legitimate, started preaching their cause at you from every direction. Would you stop using electricity, vow to never ride a car in your life, stop using furniture or anything made of wood, bicot anything made from plastic, throw away all aerosol cans, donate 90% of your money to the poor then quit your job to volunteer full time? Doubtful. You will likely continue doing what you are doing picking the battles that give YOU peace of mind, not someone else.0 -
Need2Exerc1se wrote: »tryin2die2self wrote: »Need2Exerc1se wrote: »Many of the animals commonly eaten would die without humans some would not. Pigs have been known to escape and live in the wild. But I doubt a chicken would make it through the night.
Pigs are not only known to survive in the wild... they thrive. Feral pigs are a plague upon the land.
They have no natural enemies (as we killed them all off / we released them in the US to begin with), they do untold damage to crops and water infrastructure (levies and damns). I try to bag as many as I can. As an ardent hunter, I only kill what I plan to feed my family. This animal is the exception. I will forgo a deer kill to put down a feral swine. A female pig can have three litters every two years. Each one usually has 8 to 12 shoats (piglets). Shoats can have their first litter before their first birthday. If a female only had 8 shoats and only half of them are female. Do the math on the the exponential growth of just one pair in a decade.
The answer is more wild ham and bacon!
Yard chickens would survive. I doubt many of the hen house chickens would... but some would survive.
Chickens would not survive without man for long. Dogs, coyotes, wolves, foxes, raccoons, opossums, birds of prey, wild cats are just a few predators that would happily kill them without the protection of man.
Would they exist in today's numbers, heck no. However, many an abandoned farm has chickens that peck and scratch out an existence long after Farmer Brown has kicked the bucket. Seen it to many time with my own eyes to think otherwise. As long as they have trees to roost in and some place secluded to hide their nests, they can make it. How that will play out 100, 500 or 1000 years after man has left? Dunno. You very well could be right. Animals have been living/dying long before we put our hand in the cookie jar. Nothing gonna change that once we leave. Unless we leave this a scorched/snowball Earth (sigh).0
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